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CYBER WARS
US soldier faces trial over WikiLeaks disclosures
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) June 1, 2013


From videos of US blunders to secret files: Manning's leaks
Washington (AFP) June 1, 2013 - From videos of US military blunders to Guantanamo detainee files, Bradley Manning is accused of slipping 250,000 diplomatic cables and 500,000 classified military documents to WikiLeaks.

Turned into the FBI by US hacker Adrian Lamo with whom he was chatting, the US Army private faces a court-martial starting Monday for having transmitted the files from databases to which he had access as an analyst in Iraq to the secret-spilling website.

Created in 2006 by Australian Julian Assange as a portal for the anonymous release of restricted information, WikiLeaks billed the trove of materials as the biggest ever.

Washington is still investigating whether Assange encouraged Manning to disclose more details, in which case the Australian may be prosecuted in the United States.

While WikiLeaks has always denied knowing the source of the leaks, the US government says the documents were sent to the site from November 2009 until Manning's arrest in March 2010:

-- The first document published by WikiLeaks, on February 18, 2010, that Manning admitted to having leaked was a diplomatic cable from the US Embassy in Iceland.

-- What followed, in stages between February 2010 and September 2011, were more than a quarter of a million State Department cables from US embassies and consulates dated 1966 to 2010.

Starting in November 2010, five major news organizations around the world -- The New York Times, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, Le Monde and El Pais -- collaborated with WikiLeaks to partially publish the material.

-- Manning admitted to the "willful transmission" of a video that showed a US combat helicopter shooting at Iraqi civilians in July 2007. Dubbed "collateral murder" by WikiLeaks, the video was made public by Assange during a news conference in Washington in April 2010.

-- The soldier also acknowledged he had transmitted a confidential video of a US air strike on the Afghan village of Granai, where more than a hundred civilians lost their lives in May 2009.

-- More than 90,000 documents linked to the war in Afghanistan were published in July 2010, followed in October 2010 by more than 400,000 others connected to the conflict in Iraq. These included confidential Pentagon reports revealing abuse, torture and killings of civilians.

-- Confidential files made public since April 2011 of 779 detainees who passed through the military prison at Guantanamo Bay revealed that a majority of those incarcerated there had not been charged.

The documents also showed their mental state or the content of their statements, including those made by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-confessed architect of the September 11 attacks.

Three years after his arrest in Iraq for allegedly causing America's worst ever national security breach, US Army private Bradley Manning finally goes on trial Monday over his disclosures to WikiLeaks.

Manning, who faces a possible 154-year jail sentence, has offered to plead guilty to several offenses but he denies prosecutors' most serious charge -- that he knowingly aided the enemy, chiefly Al-Qaeda and Osama Bin Laden.

The trial follows an exhaustive series of preliminary hearings that outlined the government's case against Manning, 25, over leaks of diplomatic cables and war logs that caused huge embarrassment to the United States and its allies.

The soldier's supporters argue that his actions shone a light in the darkest corners of the US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as exposing the reasoning behind American foreign policy decisions.

His opponents, however, contend that he is a traitor whose behavior wantonly endangered the lives of people around the world, including US citizens.

The lengthy nature of the case against Manning -- he was arrested in May 2010 while serving as a military intelligence analyst near Baghdad -- has revolved around the complexity of the charges he faces and his treatment in custody.

His legal defense team successfully argued that he had been subject to unduly harsh detention methods from US military personnel and, consequently, he will receive a 112-day reduction of any eventual jail sentence.

While the case has served as a cause celebre for civil liberties advocates in the United States, the government contends that Manning's actions helped the nation's enemies in a political era defined by the threat posed by Al-Qaeda.

It is that charge that Manning disputes, though the soldier admitted in testimony earlier this year, an unauthorized audio recording of which was later published online, that he did in fact pass a huge cache of files to WikiLeaks.

He said he did so to start a public debate, but the military judge hearing the case, Colonel Denise Lind, has warned she will not allow Manning's trial to turn into a wide-ranging forum on the rights or wrongs of US foreign policy.

Manning has offered to plead guilty to 10 offenses, including breaches of military discipline and good conduct, which could see him sentenced to 20 years under the courts-martial process at Fort Meade military base in Maryland.

However, he could face a maximum term of 154 years in jail if found guilty of the more serious charges, including that of "aiding the enemy."

Part of the US government's case against Manning asserts that late Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden had asked an aide to retrieve documents from the Internet that the soldier had passed to WikiLeaks.

A Navy SEAL who participated in the May 2011 raid that killed Bin Laden at his hideout in Pakistan is expected to testify, as are dozens of other witnesses.

The trial also commences as President Barack Obama's administration faces criticism for its purported crackdown on whistleblowers and the press, including accessing journalists' phone and email records as part of its probes into leaks.

Since taking office, Obama has invoked the Espionage Act, passed in 1917 to punish those who aid US enemies, six times -- twice as often as all previous presidents combined.

Although dozens of reporters are covering the trial, which is expected to last 12 weeks, some evidence will be given behind closed doors for national security reasons.

Manning's pre-trial proceedings were heavily criticized by media outlets for the government's refusal to publish legal documents regarding the case, leading to allegations of unnecessary official secrecy.

The Bradley Manning Support Network said nearly 2,000 people attended a rally in honor of the accused soldier on Saturday outside Fort Meade.

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